An important turning-point in the political and social life of the country took place on March 25, 1906, when the
Arengo met; out of 1,477 heads of family, 805 were present. Each head of family received a ballot which contained two questions: the first asking if the Government of San Marino should be headed by a Principal and Sovereign Council, and the second, if the number of members of the council should be proportionate between the city population and the rural population. This was the first move towards a referendum and true democracy in San Marino. In the past, similar attempts were made by people such as Pietro Franciosi, but without results. In the same year a second referendum took place on May 5 dealing with the first electoral laws and on June 10 the first political elections in San Marino's history resulted in a victory of the exponents of democracy. Although propaganda articles appeared in
The New York Times as early as 4 June 1915 claiming that San Marino declared war on Austria-Hungary, the republic never entered the war. The
Riminese earthquake of 16 August 1916 affected San Marino; several houses in
Serravalle collapsed. Two houses were damaged in the earlier earthquake on 17 May 1916.
Inter-war period San Marino in the 1920s, still a largely agrarian society, experienced political turmoil influenced by the events in
Fascist Italy, culminating in June 1921 in the murder in
Serravalle of Italian doctor and Fascist sympathiser Carlo Bosi by local leftists, which led to condemnation by the surrounding Italian population and threats of retaliation by Italian
squadristi. The government decided to ask Italy for help in the form of a detachment of 30
Carabinieri. As in Italy, fascism, under the
Sammarinese Fascist Party led by
Giuliano Gozi, eventually took over government of San Marino, causing the Socialist newspaper,
Nuovo Titano, to cease publication. The 1930s was an era of public works and reinvention of the Republic's economy, with the construction of the
San Marino-Rimini railway that connected it to the Italian railway network and modernization of the country's infrastructures that paved the way to its present status as a major tourist destination.
World War II troops in October 1944
San Marino was mostly uninvolved in the Second World War. In September 1940, press reports claimed that it had to have declared war on the
United Kingdom in support of Italy; however, this was later denied by the Sammarinese government. On 26 June 1944, San Marino was bombed by four waves of
Allied bombers under the belief that San Marino had been occupied by German forces and was being used to amass stores and ammunition. The Sammarinese government declared on the same day that no military installations or equipment were located on its territory, and that no belligerent forces had been allowed to enter. San Marino's hope to escape further involvement was shattered on 27 July 1944 when Major Gunther, commander of the German forces in
Forlì, delivered a letter from German headquarters in
Ferrara to San Marino's government declaring that the country's sovereignty could not be respected if, in view of military requirements, the necessity of transit of troops and vehicles arose. The communiqué, however, underlined that wherever possible occupation would be avoided. Such fears were confirmed when on 30 July a German medical corps colonel presented himself with an order for the requisition of two public buildings for the establishment of a military hospital. On the following day, 31 July 1944, in view of the likely invasion by German forces, the state sent three letters of protest: one to
Joachim von Ribbentrop, German Foreign Minister, one to
Adolf Hitler and one to
Benito Mussolini, San Marino was a refuge for over civilians who sought safety on the passing of Allied forces over the
Gothic Line The Germans and Allies clashed on San Marino's soil from 17 September to 20 September at the
Battle of San Marino; Allied troops occupied San Marino after that, but stayed only for two months before leaving.
Cold War and economic boom After the war, a social-communist government was installed in
San Marino, composed by the
Sammarinese Communist Party and the
Sammarinese Socialist Party. This is considered one of the first times anywhere in the world that a communist government was democratically elected into power. The coalition lasted from 1945 to 1957, when the
Rovereta affair occurred. 1960 saw the enlargement of universal suffrage to women. Having joined the
Council of Europe as a full member in 1988, San Marino held the rotating chair of the organisation during the first half of 1990. Following the fall of the Soviet bloc, the Sammarinese Communist Party peacefully dissolved in 1990 and restructured as the
Sammarinese Democratic Progressive Party replacing the former hammer-and-sickle logo (a communist motif representing the rights of workers) with the image of a drawing of a dove by
Pablo Picasso. San Marino became a member of the
United Nations in 1992. ==21st century to current days==